This is a list of lowercase non-hyphenated single words found in the 2009-09-27 issue of the New York Times which did not have English entries in the English Wiktionary when this list was created (2009-09-27).

More info...

Please create these entries if you are able. Feel free to maintain and annotate the list as well. Typos and non-English words can simply be removed. English words which may not qualify for inclusion for any reason can be sequestered at the bottom of the list.

The quotes often provide good usage examples and attestation evidence and, in most cases, should be included in the entry or citation page for the lemma.

To activate the "add" links, which simplify the addition of citations, add the following code to Special:Mypage/monobook.js, and clear your cache:

importScript('User:Visviva/pretext.js');

When this is done, clicking the "add" link should preload the edit form with a dummy entry including a formatted citation for the passage in question. In some cases a "notemp" link is also provided; this generates a template-free version.

In lists created since 2008-02-03, false blue links (entries that exist but lack an English section) are marked with a "*".

As so often happens in the retelling of grand and not-so-grand amours alike, her re-creation of the affair is trite and teeny-boppery, an effect magnified by her inclusion of scrapbook snapshots  her puffy first boyfriend (“giving up my virginity was special”); a 1972 wedding snap of “Sheryl and Ronnie” (they are still married); a shot of the Upper East Side snuggery where she and Bernie hooked up; and a collage of the “iconic” lipstick building where she and Bernie first met.

Sabathia set down the first 11 hitters, benefiting from a superb third-inning catch by Melky Cabrera at the center-field fence to rob Jed Lowrie, before walking his old Cleveland batterymate, Victor Martinez, with two outs in the fourth.

By the way, Brooklyn, with its striking diversity and population of 2.5 million people, encompasses a whole lot more than brownstoners and Russian immigrants (who may be simply the ones who draw more of Mr. Prokhorov’s attention).

Then they captioned each one, first drawing a series of horizontal lines under the pictures, one for each word, and then writing out each word, or an approximation thereof: For “butterfly,” Abigail wrote “btrfli.”

Until Israel’s critics figure out how to acknowledge the pain and suffering resulting from Palestinian terrorism and exterminationist rhetoric, by pointing the Palestinians and the Arabs toward real change, they will fail to sway those Israelis and Jews that are ready to take a shot at reconciliation.

Here’s a thought that might help: A word that means the opposite of another is an antonym; a word that looks as if it means one thing but means quite another could be called a phantonym, and warrants wariness.

Now that’s a more productive question, one that can be laid on a slab and dissected, every shred of disappointment pincered up and held to the light for scrutiny, every bolus of misplaced hope put under the microscope.

“I am surprised by how well the two other girls were able to meet my outrageous needs,” Ms. Schussel said, “especially by Sam’s ability to keep our friendship out of our roommateship most of the time.”

As so often happens in the retelling of grand and not-so-grand amours alike, her re-creation of the affair is trite and teeny-boppery, an effect magnified by her inclusion of scrapbook snapshots  her puffy first boyfriend (“giving up my virginity was special”); a 1972 wedding snap of “Sheryl and Ronnie” (they are still married); a shot of the Upper East Side snuggery where she and Bernie hooked up; and a collage of the “iconic” lipstick building where she and Bernie first met.

As portrayed by the marvelous actor Michael Kitchen in the British series “Foyle’s War,” he is sometimes so reserved  not eerily quiet or threateningly quiet, just quiet  that he actually appears to be thinking, something few American telecops are likely to be accused of.

Mr. Martinez’s Worcestershire-based wasasa sauce turned a small dish of sautéed skirt steak with peppers and onions into a tasty stew that could have used more Cuban bread alongside; the hot portion delivered after we first sat down was long gone.